Tuesday, October 14, 2025

Hip-Hop Takes Center Stage as Outkast and Salt-N-Pepa Prepare to Join Rock Hall

The Atlanta duo is among this year’s inductees, joining Salt-N-Pepa and other music legends in a ceremony streamed live on Disney+ Nov. 8, 2025. (Courtesy Rock & Roll Hall of Fame)
For years, fans argued that hip-hop had rewritten the rules of rock & roll. This fall, the Rock & Roll Hall
of Fame made it official. Outkast and Salt-N-Pepa will be inducted November 8 at Los Angeles’ Peacock Theater in a 40th anniversary ceremony that brings the South, the streets and the sisterhood to the Hall’s biggest stage.

The lineup, confirmed by the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Foundation, marks a breakthrough for Black music and culture. Outkast — AndrĂ© 3000 and Big Boi — will enter the Performer category alongside Bad Company, Chubby Checker, Joe Cocker, Cyndi Lauper, Soundgarden, and The White Stripes. Salt-N-Pepa, the groundbreaking Queens duo of Cheryl James and Sandra Denton, will receive the Musical Influence Award, a nod to how “Push It,” “Shoop,” and “Whatta Man” redefined empowerment in hip-hop and pop.

“This year’s inductees created their own sound and attitude that had a profound impact on culture,” said John Sykes, Chairman of the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Foundation. “Their music gave a voice to generations and influenced countless artists that followed in their footsteps.”


The ceremony — streaming live coast to coast on Disney+ at 8 p.m. EST (5 p.m. PST) and later airing on ABC on January 1, 2026 — promises a star-studded celebration of rock’s evolution. Among the presenters and performers are Missy Elliott, Killer Mike, Questlove, Maxwell, Doja Cat, Brandi Carlile, Elton John, Flea, J.I.D, Sleepy Brown, Iggy Pop, Olivia Rodrigo, and others. Together, they represent every era of rebellion and reinvention that defines the Rock Hall’s expanding universe.

While the full list of inductors has yet to be released, insiders close to the ceremony expect Southern hip-hop peers and collaborators — including Killer Mike and J.I.D — to play major roles in Outkast’s tribute. For Salt-N-Pepa, the night is expected to draw appearances from Missy Elliott and Doja Cat, both of whom have cited the duo as foundational influences.

Outkast’s induction is more than a career milestone; it’s the formal recognition of a movement. From Atlanta’s Dungeon Family collective to Grammy glory, the duo brought the world the sound of the modern South — blending funk, gospel, and social consciousness into genre-defying records like “Aquemini” and “Speakerboxxx/The Love Below.” The Rock Hall’s 2025 exhibit will include AndrĂ© 3000’s lime-green outfit from the “Hey Ya!” video, displayed alongside memorabilia from The White Stripes and Cyndi Lauper.

Sandra “Pepa” Denton, Deidre “Spinderella” Roper, and Cheryl “Salt” James of Salt-N-Pepa pose for their 1987 album in New York. The trailblazing hip-hop trio will receive the Musical Influence Award as part of the 2025 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame class. (Photo by Janette Beckman/Getty Images, courtesy Rock & Roll Hall of Fame)
For Salt-N-Pepa, the honor closes a circle that began in the mid-1980s when two nursing students decided to rap about what women actually thought. They turned dance floors into classrooms of confidence, changing the language of mainstream pop in the process. Their induction alongside Warren Zevon (Musical Influence), Thom Bell, Nicky Hopkins, and Carol Kaye (Musical Excellence), and Lenny Waronker (Ahmet Ertegun Award) underscores the Hall’s ongoing shift toward inclusivity and a broader definition of what “rock” truly means.

The 2025 ceremony’s range — from Chubby Checker’s twist to Outkast’s “Hey Ya!” — will illustrate that rock & roll’s essence was never about guitars alone. It was about defiance, self-expression, and the urge to push sound forward. In that sense, the voices from Atlanta and Queens belong here as much as anyone who ever picked up a Les Paul.

For hip-hop fans, it’s validation long overdue. For music history, it’s a reminder: rock & roll isn’t a sound. It’s a spirit. And it’s still evolving — with a Southern drawl, a bassline from Queens, and a groove that never dies.

Grammy Winner D’Angelo Dies at 51 After Private Battle With Cancer

D’Angelo, shown here in a promotional image for his 2000 album “Voodoo,” was one of the defining voices of modern soul. The Grammy-winning singer and multi-instrumentalist died at 51 after a private battle with pancreatic cancer, his family confirmed on Tuesday. (Photo: RCA Records)

The music world is in mourning: D’Angelo, the elusive and influential neo-soul pioneer whose voice defined a generation of R&B, has died at 51 after a private battle with pancreatic cancer his family and multiple media outlets confirmed on Tuesday. Reports indicate he passed away over the weekend.

Born Michael Eugene Archer in Richmond, Virginia, D’Angelo was among the architects of the modern soul revival that fused gospel roots, hip-hop sensibility, and jazz freedom. 

His debut album, “Brown Sugar,” in 1995 announced a new kind of groove — live instrumentation wrapped around lyrics that were sensual, spiritual and raw. 

The follow-up, “Voodoo,” in 2000 elevated him to icon status and earned two Grammys. Fourteen years later, his surprise return with “Black Messiah” turned reflection into revolution.

In recent years, D’Angelo had stepped out of the spotlight again. In May, he canceled a headlining slot at the Roots Picnic, citing complications from surgery. “I’m not 100 percent yet, but I’m working my way there,” a representative said at the time.

Tributes began flooding social media from peers and admirers who saw him as both innovator and spiritual force.

“Such a sad loss to the passing of D’Angelo. We have so many great times. Gonna miss you so much. Sleep peacefully D’ — Love you KING,” wrote DJ Premier on X, formerly Twitter.

“My sources tell me that D’Angelo has passed. Wow. I have no words. May he rest in perfect peace,” journalist Marc Lamont Hill posted.

Producer Alchemist added simply: “Man. Rest in peace D’Angelo.”

Fans filled his Instagram comments with heartbreak emojis and lyrics from “Untitled (How Does It Feel),” the 2000 single whose slow burn redefined intimacy on record and screen. The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame called him “a singular voice who bridged past and future — the sound of vulnerability made holy.”

Through just three studio albums, D’Angelo reshaped the sound of R&B. With Questlove, Erykah Badu, Common and J Dilla, he helped create the Soulquarians collective that blurred lines between genres and generations.

D’Angelo is survived by his two children, Michael Jr. and Imani Archer. He was previously in a longtime relationship with singer Angie Stone, who collaborated with him early in his career and shared his deep gospel and soul roots. 

Their creative and romantic partnership helped shape the direction of his first album, “Brown Sugar.” Stone died in March at 63, a loss that friends said deeply affected him.

Monday, October 13, 2025

‘Billie Eilish’ Rapper Arrested After Stopping Traffic for Video Shoot

Armani White, 28, smiles in his booking photo after being arrested Sunday in London, Ky. Police say the “Billie Eilish” rapper stopped traffic on Interstate 75 while filming a video. He was charged with disorderly conduct and illegally stopping a vehicle on a highway, then released from the Laurel County Correctional Center. (Photo: Laurel County Correctional Center)
Armani White’s latest viral moment didn’t happen onstage — it happened in the middle of an interstate.

The 29-year-old Philadelphia rapper, best known for his 2022 breakout hit “Billie Eilish,” was arrested Sunday night in Laurel County, Kentucky, after police say he stopped traffic on Interstate 75 to film a video.

According to booking records and police reports, White — whose real name is Enoch Tolbert — was taken into custody by London Police officers and charged with second-degree disorderly conduct and stopping, standing, or parking on a limited-access highway, both misdemeanors. He was booked into the Laurel County Correctional Center and released shortly after.

The incident occurred less than 24 hours after White performed as a supporting act on T-Pain’s “TP20: Celebrating 20 Years of T-Pain” tour in Newport, Ky. Witnesses told police that multiple vehicles had stopped on the highway and that a man — later identified as White — was seen dancing and jumping on a concrete median while a crew filmed.

Police said the spectacle caused several motorists to call 911, prompting officers to respond to prevent potential accidents. “The situation presented a clear traffic hazard,” one report noted, describing the impromptu shoot as “reckless and unsafe.”

White’s booking photo, released by the Laurel County Correctional Center, went viral overnight. Without his signature beaded braids — reportedly removed at officers’ request — the rapper flashes a broad smile, looking more amused than concerned.

While his representatives have yet to issue a formal statement, fans quickly connected the arrest to White’s penchant for spectacle. His platinum single “Billie Eilish” turned a playful boast into a viral moment that earned him national attention, and his blend of humor and energy has long blurred the line between charisma and chaos.

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